
Oh! The Ocean (Transparent Blue Vinyl)
The Wombats are back and bigger than ever. Oh! The Ocean trembles with the confessional emotional honesty that makes the Liverpool band's music as cathartic and relatable as it is catchy and playful, to their continuously growing young fanbase.
The three piece took 50 new songs to Echo Park, LA, in July 2024 for six weeks of sessions with new producer John Congleton (St Vincent, Wallows, Death Cab for Cutie) to create a superbly melodic album. The title is inspired by a revelatory trip to the beach frontman Matthew āMurphā Murphy took on a family holiday.
Speaking on the experience, Murph says: āIāve been to many beaches and seas and coasts over the years but for some reason it felt like the first time I had ever seen it and was truly present. There was this revelation that I had been living a life caught up in my own head, or in some kind of racing helmet or with blinkers on. It was really a potent experience. I felt like I saw everything new for the first time, and was aware that I had been so selfish to not take in how crazy the world and life is. Iād been caught up in my own BS for way too long. The album offers up some internal questions like: why are my head and body disconnected all the time? Why am I incapable at times of seeing any form of beauty in the world or in others? Why do I expect the world to conform to my will? Why do I never stop and smell the flowers?ā
Since they emerged as leading lights of the late-ā00s indie rock scene with 2007 debut A Guide to Love, Loss & Desperation, Murph, bassist Tord Ćverland Knudsen and drummer Dan Haggis have maintained an incredible upward momentum. 2011ās electro-flecked second album This Modern Glitch made them Top Ten regulars; 2015ās third Glitterbug saw them embraced by the TikTok generation, with āGreek Tragedyā a viral hit several times over. By 2018ās Beautiful People Will Ruin Your Life they'd stepped up to arenas and 2022ās Fix Yourself, Not the World consolidated their unstoppable rise with the bandās first Number One album, seeing them reach over 2.5 billion streams. Headline shows at Crystal Palace and The O2 followed amid the bandās biggest touring cycle so far, taking in arenas across the globe and culminating at Reading 2024, where the band headlined a rammed Radio One tent overspilling with crowds of 18-24-year-olds that remain their core audience twenty years into their career.
With Murph now feeling the benefits of his fresh perspective, Oh! The Ocean represents a line in the sand from which The Wombats are sprinting onwards into a mature new phase.
Original: $38.35
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Description
The Wombats are back and bigger than ever. Oh! The Ocean trembles with the confessional emotional honesty that makes the Liverpool band's music as cathartic and relatable as it is catchy and playful, to their continuously growing young fanbase.
The three piece took 50 new songs to Echo Park, LA, in July 2024 for six weeks of sessions with new producer John Congleton (St Vincent, Wallows, Death Cab for Cutie) to create a superbly melodic album. The title is inspired by a revelatory trip to the beach frontman Matthew āMurphā Murphy took on a family holiday.
Speaking on the experience, Murph says: āIāve been to many beaches and seas and coasts over the years but for some reason it felt like the first time I had ever seen it and was truly present. There was this revelation that I had been living a life caught up in my own head, or in some kind of racing helmet or with blinkers on. It was really a potent experience. I felt like I saw everything new for the first time, and was aware that I had been so selfish to not take in how crazy the world and life is. Iād been caught up in my own BS for way too long. The album offers up some internal questions like: why are my head and body disconnected all the time? Why am I incapable at times of seeing any form of beauty in the world or in others? Why do I expect the world to conform to my will? Why do I never stop and smell the flowers?ā
Since they emerged as leading lights of the late-ā00s indie rock scene with 2007 debut A Guide to Love, Loss & Desperation, Murph, bassist Tord Ćverland Knudsen and drummer Dan Haggis have maintained an incredible upward momentum. 2011ās electro-flecked second album This Modern Glitch made them Top Ten regulars; 2015ās third Glitterbug saw them embraced by the TikTok generation, with āGreek Tragedyā a viral hit several times over. By 2018ās Beautiful People Will Ruin Your Life they'd stepped up to arenas and 2022ās Fix Yourself, Not the World consolidated their unstoppable rise with the bandās first Number One album, seeing them reach over 2.5 billion streams. Headline shows at Crystal Palace and The O2 followed amid the bandās biggest touring cycle so far, taking in arenas across the globe and culminating at Reading 2024, where the band headlined a rammed Radio One tent overspilling with crowds of 18-24-year-olds that remain their core audience twenty years into their career.
With Murph now feeling the benefits of his fresh perspective, Oh! The Ocean represents a line in the sand from which The Wombats are sprinting onwards into a mature new phase.
















